From the streets of Vancouver to the occupations in D.C.:Indict Bush Now!

Dear supporter of IndictBushNow,

A four-count legal complaint calling fo the arrest of George W. Bush was filed on Oct. 20 in Canadian Courts.

Iraq war veterans have brought the message of the IndictBushNow movement to the ongoing occupations in Washington, D.C.

Canadians take to the streets to demand the arrest and prosecution of Bush for his crimes, Vancouver, Oct. 20.

George W. Bush cannot go anywhere without being confronted
with the specter of arrest and indictment for torture and other crimes.

The people of Canada went into the streets and into court
demanding the arrest of Bush when he showed up for a $599 plate lunch on
Oct. 20 in Vancouver.

Bush’s torture victims and their attorneys filed a four-count legal complaint with the courts in British Columbia that included a
69-page draft indictment of Bush.

A spokesperson for Canadian Centre for International Justice,
which filed the legal complaint with the support of Amnesty International and other human
rights organizations, said the court action included “4,000 pages of evidence [that] … detail the
multi-faceted torture program, which included holding detainees in secret CIA
sites around the globe, extraordinary rendition, and the torture of detainees
at Guantánamo Bay.”

Bush was forced to cancel his scheduled appearance at a
swanky fundraiser in Geneva, Switzerland, in February when he was confronted with
a similar legal complaint charging him with torture.

Thousands were tortured

Thousands of innocent people were arrested, sent to secret
detention and torture facilities where they endured years of gruesome abuse,
isolation and humiliation without ever having been charged with a crime.

“George Bush should pay for what he did wrong,” Murat
Kurnaz, a 29-year old father of two who was repeatedly tortured during his
half-decade of false imprisonment, told the Vancouver Observer. “I hope it
will happen and he’s arrested.”

The message of the IndictBushNow movement is also being
raised throughout the United States.

U.S. war veterans, who, along with the Iraqi people, have
suffered so greatly because of Bush’s illegal invasion of Iraq, brought the
IndictBushNow message on banners and placards to the Occupy actions in
Washington, D.C., this month.

“Bush and Cheney are war criminals and they are not above
the law,” stated Mike Prysner, an Iraq war veteran. “The Occupy movement is
spreading throughout the country today because people want justice and change.
We are working with the IndictBushNow movement so that this message resonates
throughout the country. This is a global movement for accountability and we
will not rest until these officials are held accountable for these most terrible
crimes.”